Tournament Notes

The $10,000 buy-in Heads-Up No-Limit Hold’em World Championship attracted 256 entries. The event was closed off at 256 players due to the heads-up single-elimination format. The total prize pool amounted to $2,406,400. The top 64 finishers (which meant all winners of at least two heads-up matches) collected prize money.

This is only the second time this event has been included on the WSOP schedule. Last year in the inaugural, more entries were accepted (392). However, some players randomly drew a “bye” and did not have to compete in the first round. This was ultimately viewed as giving too much of an advantage to those players. Hence, the adoption of the single-elimination format with no byes this year meant that only specific multiples of entrants would be workable. Hence, the tournament was forced to accept a limited number of entries – with 128, 256, or 512 being the most likely targets. It was decided that the tournament would be capped at 256 players.

All matches/pairings in the heads-up competition were conducted by a random draw.

The tournament was played over three consecutive days. Since 256 players started the tournament in a heads-up format on Day One, 128 winners survived to play in the second round. The second round produced 64 survivors. The 64 played down to 32 in round three. O Day Two, the field of 32 was reduced to 16 in round four. Round five took the field from 16 down to 8. Round six played from 8 down to 4. The final four players took seats in two separate matches at the final table on Day Three. Those two winners faced off in a “best two out of three” finale played out on ESPN’s main stage.

The format used at the WSOP is similar to the March Madness brackets in (U.S.) college basketball. However, the field actually starts with 256 entrants instead of 64 teams. Furthermore, players in this competition are not seeded.

The 2008 Heads-Up No-Limit Hold’em World Champion is Kenny Tran, from Arcadia, CA. He is a professional poker player, who has specialized in high-limit cash games most of his career.

Tran collected $539,056 for first place. He also earned his first WSOP gold bracelet. This was his 12th WSOP career cash.

Tran has an amazing story. He was born in Vietnam. He once worked at McDonalds. When he turned 21, he worked as a poker dealer. Then, he played recreational poker, mostly in low-limit games. Tran gradually moved up through the ranks to the point where he now routinely plays for six-figure sums amongst the toughest competition in the world.

Tran has a number of impressive tournament finishes over the past year. He finished 16th place in the 2007 WSOP Main Event. He finished 5th in the 2007 $50,000 buy-in H.O.R.S.E. championship. He took 16th place in the inaugural WSOP Europe championship held last year. Now, he has won the 2008 Heads-Up No-Limit Hold’em World Championship.

Trans victory occurred on Fathers Day. He is the father to three children.

“It means a lot to me to win, especially on Fathers Day,” Tran said afterward. “The first time you win this is really great and it’s just a great, great feeling. I have never really had this kind of feeling before.”

“I definitely have a strategy,” Tran stated after his final heads-up win. “I grind them all out. I like to grind people out and make them feel bored. I just torture them and let them finally make a mistake.”

The second-place finisher was Alec Torelli. This was the first time to cash for the 21-year-old player.

The final heads-up confrontation between Tran and Torelli was the “best two out of three” format. Tran won 2 to 0.

The first match (won by Tran) took 94 hands and lasted 2.5 hours.

The second match (won by Tran) took 80 hands and lasted about 2 hours.

WSOP gold bracelet winner Vanessa Selbst finished in the top four. She was eliminated in the semi-final round, losing to Alec Torelli. Selbst won her first WSOP title only days earlier in the $1,500 buy-in Pot-Limit Omaha championship (Event #19). Selbst came close to becoming the first woman in WSOP history to ever win two open events. Incredibly, Selbst also finished in the top four of this same event last year. She now has 13 wins and 2 losses in heads-up play over the past two years. Actually, with her Pot-Limit Omaha victory, Selbst is 14-2 in overall heads-up matches the last two years.

Last year’s champion, Daniel Schreiber played in this event. But he did not make it past the second round. This brings the current streak to 25 straight non-cashes for defending champions in their respective events.

On the day after the Hinkle Brothers (Grant and Blair) became only the second such tandem to win WSOP gold bracelets, the Mizrachi Brothers made a serious bid of their own to join the exclusive club. However, Robert Mizrachi ended up going out in the final eight, whereas Michael “the Grinder” Mizrachi made it to the final 16.

Aside from his success as a high-stakes game and tournament player, Lyle Berman is best known as a casino mogul and co-founder of the World Poker Tour.

Through the conclusion of Event #25, only one player has cashed five times to date – Nikolay Evdakov, from Moscow, Russia. Evdakov is in contention to challenge the record set for “Most WSOP Cashes in a Single Year,” shared by four players -- Michael Binger (2007), Chad Brown (2007), Phil Hellmuth, Jr. (2006), and Humberto Brenes (2006), with eight in-the-money strikes.

The current Milwaukee’s Best Light “Player of the Year” standings shows Erick Lindgren on top of the points list with one gold bracelet win and four cashes. However, Vanessa Selbst is close in points along with Jacobo Fernandez, who currently ranks third.

Through the conclusion of Event #25 at this year’s World Series of Poker, the gold bracelet count by nations and states reads as follows:

Through the conclusion of Event #25 at this year’s World Series of Poker, the “Professionals versus Amateurs” gold bracelet scoreboard reads:

Professionals - 19 wins
Amateurs - 4 wins
Semi-Pros - 2 wins

A special note of congratulations to poker player Rocco Mediate: On this day, Rocco Mediate tied with Tiger Woods in the U.S. Open (golf) championship. An 18-hole playoff will take place tomorrow. Mediate played in the 2006 WSOP Main Event.

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